A REASON TO CODE
January 5, 2004
"Order is heaven's first law."
-- Shaker saying
The term "code" derives from "caudex", which was simultaneously the trunk of a tree and a set of laws. It is one of several terms clustering around the idea of power being resident in a sacred tree; the Roland, at the center of the traditional village. A code, then, is etymologically and functionally the trunk around which a settlement arranges itself.
--
"It is absurd to leave corrective measures in the hands of those responsible for the problem in the first place."
-- Lewis Mumford
"I would not give a fig for the simplicity this side of complexity, but I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity."
-- Oliver Wendell Holmes
Within the last half-century, some 30 million buildings have
degraded cities and reduced landscapes.
Must we tolerate this comprehensive disaster in exchange for the
(perhaps) three thousand great buildings that modernist architects have
produced? Such a win-loss ratio is as unacceptable in architecture as it would
be in any other field. We are compelled to intervene and have found that codes
are the most effective instruments of reform.
We must code because the default setting in contemporary design
is mediocrity and worse. Those who object to codes imagine that they constrain
architectural masterpieces (their own, usually). But great buildings are few
and the more likely outcome is kitsch. Codes can assure a minimum level of
competence, even if in so doing they constrain certain possibilities.
We use codes because those who are charged with designing,
supervising and building communities tend to ignore education and avoid exhortation,
but they are accustomed to following codes. It was the achievement to the
mid-century generation of planners to have embedded codes in the political and
legal process. We must take advantage of this.
We code because ours is a nation founded on law. We prefer to
work within known rules rather than be subject to the opinion of boards,
politicians and bureaucrats.
We code because bureaucracies cannot be (have never been)
dismantled. They will however, willingly
administer whatever codes are in hand. This has a potential for reform more
efficient than education.
Codes are currently pervasive. Replacing them with a void is
legally unsustainable. It is for us to re-conceive the codes so that they
result in better places to live.
We must code so that the various professions that affect
urbanism will act with unity of purpose. Without integrated codes, architects,
civil engineers and landscape architects can undermine each others intentions.
Without integrated codes, the result of development is never more than the
unassembled collection of urban potential.
When architects do not control the codes, buildings are shaped
by fire marshals, civil engineers, poverty advocates, market experts,
accessibility standards, materials suppliers and liability attorneys. Codes
written by architects clear a field of action for typological and syntactic
concerns.
We code because unguided towns and cities tend, not to vitality,
but to socioeconomic monocultures. The wealthy gather in
their enclaves, the middle-class in their neighborhoods, and the poor in the
residue. Shops and restaurants cluster around certain price-points, offices find their prestige addresses and sweatshops
their squalid ones. Some areas uniformly gentrify, while viable neighborhoods
self-segregate and decay. This process occurs in historical cities no less than
in new suburbs. Codes can secure that measure of diversity without which
urbanism withers.
We make use of codes as the means to redistribute building
design to others. Authentic urbanism requires the intervention of many. Those
who would design all the buildings themselves produce architectural projects –
monocultures of design – but they are not involved in the practice of urbanism.
We must code so that buildings cooperate towards a spatially defined
public realm. This no longer occurs as a matter of course unless coded to be
otherwise. The demands of parking and the arbitrary singularity of architects
tend to create vague, sociofugal places that
undermine the possibility of community.
We must code so that private buildings achieve the modicum of
visual silence which is a requisite of an urban fabric. Conversely, codes must
also protect the prerogative of civic buildings to express the aspirations of
the institutions they accommodate and also the inspiration of their architects.
This is the dialectic
or urbanism.
We code to protect
the character of specific locales from the universalizing tendencies of modern
real estate development.
We code because the location of the urban and the rural is of a
fundamental importance that cannot be left to the vicissitudes of ownership.
Codes and their associated maps address the where as well as the what.
We must code to assure that urban places can be truly urban and
that rural places remain truly rural. Otherwise, misconceived environmentalism
tends to the partial greening of all places; the result being neither one nor
the other, but the ambiguous garden city of sprawl.
We must code so that buildings incorporate a higher degree of
environmental response than is otherwise warranted by conventional economic
analysis.
We must code so that buildings are durable, and also mutable, in
proper measure. This is crucial at the long-range time-scale of urbanism.
Without codes, older urban areas tend to suffer from
disinvestment, as the market seeks stable environments. The competing private
codes of the homeowners associations, the guidelines of office parks, and the
rules of shopping centers create predictable outcomes that lure investment away
from existing cities and towns. Codes level the playing field for the
inevitable competition.
We must prepare the new private association codes of developers
because it is they who have built our cities and continue to do so. The profit
motive was once capable of building the best places that we still have. Codes
can assist in the restoration of this standard.
We code in defiance of an avant-garde culture that prizes the alternating
extremes of unfettered genius and servility to the zeitgeist. There are
positions between. Urbanism intrinsically transcends the limits set by our
time. We know that it is possible to affect the current reality and we accept
the responsibility.
We code because we are not relativists. We observe certain
urbanisms that support the self-defined pursuit of happiness (the stated right
of Americans). We also observe other urbanisms that tend to undermine that
pursuit. Through codes we attempt to make the first a reality.
We prepare codes because it is the most abstract, rigorous and
intellectually refined practice available to a designer. And because it is also
verifiable: by being projected into the world, codes engage a reality that can
lead to resounding failure. In comparison, theoretical writing is a delicacy
that survives only under the protection of the academy.
We code because codes can compensate for deficient professional
training. We will continue to code, so long as the schools continue to educate
architects towards self-expression rather than towards context, to theory
rather than practice, to individual building rather than to the whole.
We look forward to the day when we will no longer need to code.